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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Physiological responses of semiarid grasses. III.* Growth in relation to temperature and soil water deficit

EK Christie

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 26(3) 447 - 457
Published: 1975

Abstract

The optimum temperature for vegetative growth of mulga grass was about 25°C, and for Mitchell and buffel grasses 30°. Buffel grass had the highest yield at all temperatures, partly because of its higher growth rate which in turn can be ascribed to both a higher net assimilation rate and the diversion of a greater proportion of dry weight into leaf area.

Seedlings with an ample supply of phosphate had higher relative growth rates than phosphorus-deficient seedlings at the commencement of the soil drying cycle, but their growth rates declined more rapidly as the soil water potential fell. This decline was associated with a reduction in the rate of phosphate absorption as well as a decrease in the tissue phosphorus concentration.

*Part II, Aust. J. Agric. Res., 26: 437 (1975).

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9750447

© CSIRO 1975

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